Identifiability in Functional Connectivity May Unintentionally Inflate Prediction Results
Anton Orlichenko,
Gang Qu,
Kuan-Jui Su
et al.
Abstract:Functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) is an invaluable tool in studying cognitive processes in vivo. Many recent studies use functional connectivity (FC), partial correlation connectivity (PC), or fMRI-derived brain networks to predict phenotypes with results that sometimes cannot be replicated. At the same time, FC can be used to identify the same subject from different scans with great accuracy. In this paper, we show a method by which one can unknowingly inflate classification results from 61% accuracy to 86… Show more
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